The Feldman File covers eBooks, publishing, new media, Internet services, consumer electronics and salsa dancing. (Okay, not salsa dancing, but it'll be interesting to see how many people looking for information on salsa dancing end up here.)

Not necessarily. Satellite (DirecTV and Dish) and IPTV services (Verizon FiOS and AT&T U-Verse) gained a total of 495,000 subscribers in the same quarter (414,000 for IPTV, 81,000 for satellite), and the satellite services don't even offer high-speed Internet. Why the big gain? You've probably seen the aggressive introductory price deals offered by the satellite and IPTV companies on television or in the mail, so people are switching to these services to save money.

So what does it all mean? We simply don't know yet. Over the next year or so, we can start sorting out what's really going on and identify the underlying causes. Are we seeing a temporary drop due to economic pressures (people losing or in fear of losing their jobs) that will be reversed when the economy improves? Are people experimenting with Internet video or committing to it as a replacement for pay TV? Is there a long-term shift from cable to IPTV and satellite, or in a saturated market, are people simply switching back and forth to get the best deal, just like they used to do with long distance services?

About Me

I spent 25 years in Silicon Valley managing and launching products for Internet, software and hardware companies. I then moved into the book industry, where I advise publishers and distributors on how best to enter the eBook market.